AIMS: To analyse why rural health workforce initiatives have not delivered sustainable surgical services in rural and regional Australia, and to identify system-level policy changes that could improve access. CONTEXT: Nearly one-third of Australians live in rural or remote areas, however rural hospitals face shortages of general and specialist surgeons, have dependence on locums, and frequently use inter-hospital transfers. Despite national strategies aimed at rural workforce equity, surgical services remain highly variable by location and face difficulty in sustaining them. SOURCES: This analysis draws on federal and state workforce strategies, national policy documents including the National Medical Workforce Strategy and Stronger Rural Health Strategy, accreditation and workforce governance reviews from the Australian Government, published statements from professional bodies including the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons and the Australian Medical Association, and peer-reviewed literature on rural surgery, training pathways, and service delivery. APPROACH: We applied Walt and Gilson's health policy triangle (actors, content, context and process) to map power, accountability, and implementation pathways relevant to the rural surgical workforce. Actor influence and interest were further examined using a power-interest matrix. CONCLUSIONS: Responsibility for training, accreditation, funding, and service delivery is fragmented across federal, state, and professional actors, with no mechanism to enforce or coordinate rural surgical service provision. Current reforms rely on voluntary uptake by local champions. We propose three policy shifts: reframing rural surgical access around service delivery, a national rural surgical workforce authority, and a rural surgical data and accountability framework.
Carmichael et al. (Tue,) studied this question.